# FIFA World Cup
> FIFA's quadrennial world football championship, held since 1930 and expanded in 2026 to 48 teams spanning the United States, Mexico, and Canada.

**Meta:** type: reference · date: 2026-07-03 · heads:  · 4 takes · 3 lenses · 2 regions

## What it is

The FIFA World Cup is the quadrennial men's international football championship organized by FIFA (Fédération Internationale de Football Association), the global governing body for association football, headquartered in Zurich, Switzerland. Every four years, national teams compete across a group stage and knockout rounds spanning roughly five weeks. The competition is open to the senior men's national teams of FIFA's 211 member associations, who qualify through continental confederation playoffs in the years before each edition. FIFA's member congress votes to award hosting rights, which bring significant infrastructure investment, broadcast revenue, and tourism returns for the host nation or nations.

## History

The first World Cup was held in July 1930 in Uruguay, organized on the initiative of FIFA president Jules Rimet, with 13 nations competing. Uruguay won the inaugural final 4-2 over Argentina in Montevideo. No tournaments were held in 1942 or 1946 due to World War II, and the competition resumed in Brazil in 1950. The format expanded steadily: 16 teams competed from 1934 to 1978, then 24 from 1982 to 1994, then 32 from 1998 to 2022. Eight nations have won the title across 22 editions through 2022: Brazil five times (1958, 1962, 1970, 1994, 2002), Germany four times (1954, 1974, 1990, 2014), Italy four times (1934, 1938, 1982, 2006), Argentina three times (1978, 1986, 2022), France twice (1998, 2018), Uruguay twice (1930, 1950), England once (1966), and Spain once (2010).

## Current state

The 2026 edition, the tournament's 23rd, is the largest in the competition's history. Forty-eight teams compete in 12 groups of four, with the top two from each group and the eight best third-place finishers advancing to a Round of 32, bringing the total match count to 104, up from 64 in 2022. Three nations co-host for the first time: the United States (11 venues), Mexico (3 venues), and Canada (2 venues). The tournament opened June 11, 2026, and ends with the final on July 19. As of early July 2026, the Round of 32 is underway. [Canada reached the Round of 16](/ar/n/world-cup-canada-south-africa-r32-jun28) for the first time in the program's men's World Cup history. [Brazil needed a 96th-minute goal](/ar/n/brazil-japan-world-cup-r32-jun29) to survive against Japan. South Korea's [head coach resigned](/ar/n/korea-wc2026-coach-resign-jun28) after a group-stage exit, with South Korea's president ordering a government investigation. Morocco's knockout-round run [triggered clashes with police in The Hague](/ar/n/hague-morocco-clashes-jun30)'s Schilderswijk district. [Paraguay eliminated Germany](/ar/n/paraguay-germany-world-cup-r32-jun29) in one of the round's major upsets.

## Relationships

FIFA projects the 2026 four-year cycle to generate roughly US$13 billion in revenue, with broadcast rights exceeding US$4.2 billion and sponsorship above US$2.8 billion, both records. The expansion from 32 to 48 teams, approved by FIFA Congress in January 2017, drove a 47% growth in match inventory and underpins the revenue increase. The tournament's [data partnership with Saudi Aramco](/ar/n/fifa-aramco-power-rankings-2026), billed as the exclusive Energy Partner in a deal worth roughly US$400 million over four years, has drawn opposition from 130 women players across 27 nations demanding FIFA terminate the arrangement. Economic impact modeling projects US$80.1 billion in gross output from the 2026 edition, with US$30.5 billion attributable to the US economy alone, though the projections come from a FIFA-commissioned study.

## What to watch

- Round of 16 results (July 4-8, 2026) and whether the expanded format sustains the upset rate seen in the Round of 32.
- Which confederation's teams dominate the quarterfinals, and how CONMEBOL and UEFA perform relative to AFC and CAF.
- FIFA's governance response to the Aramco sponsorship dispute, ahead of the 2027 Women's World Cup carrying the same deal.
- Long-term economic returns for the three co-host nations and whether the 2026 model shapes the bidding landscape for 2030.

## Regional takes (batched by bias / lens)

### official record
- **FIFA** (Switzerland, en) — Official FIFA tournament hub for the 2026 World Cup documenting the 48-team format, 12-group structure, co-host nations, full schedule, and match results across 16 host cities in the United States, Mexico, and Canada.
  Source: https://www.fifa.com/en/tournaments/mens/worldcup/canadamexicousa2026
- **FIFA** (Switzerland, en) — FIFA's account of the tournament format changes from the inaugural 13-team 1930 edition in Uruguay through each expansion to the 2026 jump to 48 teams and 104 matches.
  Source: https://www.fifa.com/en/tournaments/mens/worldcup/canadamexicousa2026/articles/world-cup-format-evolution-change-history-1930-2026

### business and revenue analysis
- **Forbes** (United States, en) — Breaks down FIFA's 2026 cycle revenue projection of roughly US$13 billion, including broadcast rights exceeding US$4.2 billion, sponsorship above US$2.8 billion, and the 47% growth in match inventory from 64 to 104 games.
  Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/brettknight/2026/07/01/the-numbers-behind-the-2026-world-cup/

### academic economic analysis
- **NC State College of Natural Resources** (United States, en) — Examines the US$80.1 billion gross economic output projection for the 2026 tournament, including US$30.5 billion attributable to the US economy, and how benefit distribution among three co-host nations differs from single-nation editions.
  Source: https://cnr.ncsu.edu/news/2026/06/fifa-world-cup-economic-impact/

## Across the graph
- Related: [[brazil-japan-world-cup-r32-jun29]], [[world-cup-canada-south-africa-r32-jun28]], [[hague-morocco-clashes-jun30]], [[fifa-aramco-power-rankings-2026]], [[korea-wc2026-coach-resign-jun28]], [[paraguay-germany-world-cup-r32-jun29]]
- Entities: Fifa World Cup, Fifa, Hosting Bids, Media Rights, Sponsorship

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Canonical: https://rbtfl.xyz/ar/n/fifa-world-cup-dossier